K
KennyFlys
Guest
Boortz was talking about this on Monday and I finally got a chance to see it...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uEP7uti0PDw
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uEP7uti0PDw
I thought Europe WAS a country!.
Man, this is sad.
I thought Europe WAS a country!.
Man, this is sad.
The IEEE commitee 802, those are the guys who make 802.11 WiFi, 802.16 WiMAX, Ethernet, etc. Smart guys!
I participate in those meetings and we decided to have at least one non-North American plenary meeting per year. Well the leadership of IEEE 802 decided for the 2008 NON-NORTH AMERICAN meeting to go to Vancouver, British Columbia Canada. Apparently Canada is no longer in North America!
What are you if not reasonably well educated? Other than going to have a hard time without some other talent, such as the one she has?Kelly Pickler - and American Idol country singer girl.
Thank heavens the child can sing...
I was going to say she's dumber than a bag of hammers, but is it being dumb? Or just poorly educated?
The EU is currently such a hodge podge of Sovereign Laws and some quasi-Federal trade stuff that it is remarkable that anyone would know the exact law on some point.
~ Christopher
I hate what I'm about to do.
Well there is the one question that is asked. The answer is tab A into slot B.Yikes. There really needs to be an application process for breeding. I guess this just proves that "You can't fix stupid."
That's not entirely fair.
Pick some cambodian peasant. Do they speak more than one language? Probably not.
A Harvard professor? Probably 2 or 3.
I personally speak three languages.
~ Christopher
The point is that the majority of first world, second world, and some third world countries teach multiple languages, many from the first year of school. The sad fact is that American universities barely offer foreign language studies, let alone require them. And don't even look at primary schools.
And the point behind your point is that we don't need to speak more than english for our economic survival. As english is now the international business language, the non-english speakers do need to learn at least one more language - english. Please note I am not saying this is good or right, but what is.The point is that the majority of first world, second world, and some third world countries teach multiple languages, many from the first year of school.
That certainly explains why my wife moved to this country to study Slavic Languages here at Yale. What could she have been thinking?The sad fact is that American universities barely offer foreign language studies, let alone require them.
Huh? The University of Wisconsin (Madison) has always required foreign language to graduate, and in the 90's upped the requirement to needing two years of foreign language in high school to even get in. They made that requirement in my senior year of high school, which kept me out.
I lived in the Netherlands for a year and spoke Dutch but that was a looooooooooong time ago. I can just kind of barely understand a conversation in Dutch if I really concentrate, but speak it? Uh, not any more. I could probably pick it back up fairly quickly though.
That certainly explains why my wife moved to this country to study Slavic Languages here at Yale. What could she have been thinking?
-Skip
My uni offered Spanish and French, and starting next year won't even offer French. And you can only take two semesters, which is the requirement to graduate. It's ridiculous.
It's clear your wife had her mind set on marrying someone who stayed young and would never grow up.My uni offered Spanish and French, and starting next year won't even offer French. And you can only take two semesters, which is the requirement to graduate. It's ridiculous.
Wow. Well, I guess you went to a crappy university.
The one language course that really did interest me in school was Technical Japanese. It seemed relevant, as an Electrical Engineering major.
Now, in terms of what is offered at Wisconsin, I don't think we're falling behind at all:
Arabic
Azeri
Chinese (also "Classical Chinese")
Czech
Danish
Dutch
Filipino
Finnish
French
German
Greek
Hebrew
Hindi
Hmong
Icelandic
Indonesian
Italian
Japanese (also "Classical Japanese", Technical Japanese, and Japanese for Business and Industry)
Korean
Latin
Norwegian
Ojibwe (also available: "Survey of North American Indian languages")
Old English
Old Norse
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Russian
Sanskrit
Serbo-Croatian
Spanish (and Medical Spanish)
Swahili
Swedish
Telugu
Thai
Tibetan
Turkish
Twi
Urdu
Uzbek
Vietnamese
Xhosa
Yoruba
Holy f***. That's only in the fall timetable, and most of the above have at least four semesters available.
The point is that the majority of first world, second world, and some third world countries teach multiple languages, many from the first year of school. The sad fact is that American universities barely offer foreign language studies, let alone require them. And don't even look at primary schools.
If every bordering state spoke a different language I can promise you we would be taught multiple languages too. But the fact is that the vast majority of us will never encounter a need for another language. I know English and never have I needed another. You cannot compare the teachings of small European countries to us.
There are a lot more interesting and useful things I try to learn. Thirteen languages isn't one of them.
I'm sure that was a precious smile. Although she will certainly learn English in time, it has to be very refreshing for her to suddenly be acknowledged in a language she knows well.On the other hand, you can really blow a foreigner's mind if you speak their language.
I discovered a little girl in my daughter's pre-school class is Polish. She doesn't speak English yet, as they only moved here a few months ago. I still speak a (VERY) little Polish, learned when my father took us on a sabbatical to Poland. I said hello to her in Polish -- you should have seen her eyes light up. Later that week, I saw her in the parking lot with her mom. I said "Good morning Julia, how are you?" in Polish and her mom's eyes bugged out in amazement. Too bad that pretty much taps out what I remember, other than a few useless phrases. Still -- it was fun to see her mom's reaction.